The printer driver for PDF on Linux (CentOS) is handled by the LC inclusion
of the Cairo library into the engine (as I understand it). There are no
printer drivers other than Cups. I have updated Cups to the latest versions
available and there is no difference.
Sean Cole
*Pi Digital *
On Fri, 4 D
Back in the MetaCard days, I was told that problems like this were often
caused by the printer driver. If there's an update, I'd install it.
--
Jacqueline Landman Gay | jac...@hyperactivesw.com
HyperActive Software | http://www.hyperactivesw.com
On December 4, 2020 10:42:50 AM "Sean Cole \(Pi\)
Alas, I am still getting the same results with both duplicated and brand
new fields. Even in a whole new stack. I'm not getting very far with this.
What is making the text get so screwed up? Does anyone have any insight?
Thanks again, Richard.
Sean Cole
*Pi Digital *
On Fri, 4 Dec 2020 at 06:42,
That’s a possibility. Interesting. I’ll give it a go when I’m more awake.
Thanks Richard
Sean Cole
Pi Digital
> On 4 Dec 2020, at 06:16, Richard Gaskin via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Sean Cole wrote:
>> I've got a CentOS7 server that I am printing reports from as PDFs. No
>> matter which fon
Sean Cole wrote:
I've got a CentOS7 server that I am printing reports from as PDFs. No
matter which font or style I use I get occasional anomalies where
characters from words get placed over each other like a kerning issue gone
mental.
Bad rendering:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/v09vacw8x3873qh/Scr
Hi all,
I've got a CentOS7 server that I am printing reports from as PDFs. No
matter which font or style I use I get occasional anomalies where
characters from words get placed over each other like a kerning issue gone
mental.
Bad rendering:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/v09vacw8x3873qh/Screenshot%20